Welcome to your Morning Buzz, rounding up news and views regarding the Green Bay Packers from around the web and here at PackersNews.com.

The Packers (1-0-1) will hit the road for the first time this season when they play at noon Sunday at Washington.

We'll start with Pete Dougherty and Eric Baranczyk's analysis of what we learned about the Packers during Sunday's 29-29 tie with Minnesota.

Pete and Eric write:

To win big games in the NFL, you need your best players to make plays, and Sunday, the Packers’ best receiver had a chance for two tough touchdown catches in the final two minutes, either of which would have sealed the game, and both times he failed to come up with the ball.

On the first, Aaron Rodgers made a good throw moving to his right that Davante Adams had in his hands but linebacker Eric Kendricks stripped out as they went to the ground. On the second, Rodgers made a good back-shoulder throw that bounced off Adams’ forearms after he’d been hand fighting with cornerback Xavier Rhodes. Rhodes’ coverage was tight, but he never touched the ball.

Neither was an easy catch for Adams, but they were the kind teams need from their best receiver to win a game against what figures to be one of the NFC’s top Super Bowl contenders.

Be sure to read the entire analysis here:

The Packers failed to pressure Cousins late in Sunday's game, and the Vikings QB made them pay. https://t.co/L7aiU1Tjl2

Popular opinion seems to be on Matthews' side (even from former Bears executives):

The NFL’s response to Mathews hit on Cousins is bogus. They claim he picked him up and drove him into ground. False, Cousins was only on 1 leg when contact was made. Hit brought other leg off the ground. The hit was 100% legal

Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins to Peter King of NBC, regarding the controversial Clay Matthews penalty: "I’m sure it was probably a generous call, and two or three years ago, it probably doesn’t get flagged." More from King here: